Monk: After taking on guys with Yeti coolers, Yeti buckets, Yeti chairs, Yeti lunchboxes, craft beer drinkers, and so much more, the You Betcha guy takes aim on guys with Traeger grills.
Check out more on the You Betcha YouTube channel.
Monk: After taking on guys with Yeti coolers, Yeti buckets, Yeti chairs, Yeti lunchboxes, craft beer drinkers, and so much more, the You Betcha guy takes aim on guys with Traeger grills.
Check out more on the You Betcha YouTube channel.
My new year’s resolution: I will finally do pork steak’s in my backyard. Mark my word. Now, just to find a local grocery or butcher shop that has them or will cut them for me. -Monk
Congrats to Jon G’s Barbecue on their receipt of this award from Hometown Heroes of Union County
Three barbecue joints – Midwood Smokehouse, Sweet Lew’s BBQ, and Noble Smoke – make Charlotte Magazine’s 50 best restaurants in Charlotte list
Highlands Smokehouse has new ownership, and they aim to bring a beer garden vibe to the barbecue restaurant
Bib’s Downtown in Winston-Salem was the latest casualty of the pandemic right before the new year
Sweet Lew’s BBQ is the one barbecue joint on the list, but mmmm…pork and chicken skins
Apple City BBQ in Taylorsville introduces a few new menu items for 2021 that have a local bent to them: their hot links will be sourced from Chapman Cattle Company in Alexander County and their grits will be stone ground the old fashioned way at Linney’s Water Mill
RIP to Mike Mills of 17th Street Barbecue, simply known as “The Legend”
So this happened
…which led to Texas Monthly’s Daniel Vaughn attempting to recreate
Donnie Harris Sr of Pack Jack Barbecue in Sebastapol has been smoking for 40 years
Ribs n Reds is NC-born Chef Bryce Shuman’s pivot to barbecue
Kevin’s BBQ Joints with a couple of recent posts about the knives and sharpeners that barbecue joints use
5 lb barbecue cake
LOL
Monk: The Charlotte barbecue news seemingly slowed down in the last 3 months of 2020 as the restaurants that thankfully are still open continue to struggle through the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. As we begin 2021, here’s hoping the news is more positive than negative. Fingers crossed!
10/12 Charlotte-based Bojangles briefly expanded to barbecue for National Pulled Pork Day on October 12th
10/13 – Midwood Smokehouse is one of the barbecue restaurants that politicians make a point to visit when in Charlotte
10/15 – Mac’s Speed Shop handed out free pulled pork for early voters in front of the Bojangles Entertainment Complex
11/9 – Midwood Smokehouse‘s brisket cheesesteak makes this list of the 6 “must-try” ones in Charlotte
11/23 – Perry’s Pig Pickin’ in Mint Hill is part of a small grocery store; the history of how this Perry brother didn’t get into the jewelry business in the Charlotte Ledger
11/28 The Smoke Pit celebrated 6 years open at its original Concord location
12/3 – Chef Jim Noble of Noble Smoke, his religiously conservative views, and how they fit in with today’s Charlotte
12/16 Sweet Lew’s BBQ introduces brisket tamales
12/22 Jon G’s Barbecue makes Charlotte Five’s list of best takeout meals in 2020
Monk: This holiday while we’re all stuck at home bunkering down until the COVID-19 vaccine is widely distributed, why not watch some barbecue-focused TV shows to take your mind off things?
This will be our last post of the year, so we will see you in 2021!
This post is updated as of December 2020







The American BBQ Showdown is more “Great British Bakeoff” than “Chopped” or “Top Chef,” with 8 amateur or competition barbecue pitmaster competing against each other in different meat competitions. Filmed outside of Atlanta in pre-pandemic times, it provided a welcome distraction for barbecue fans this past fall.
Hollywood mega writer/director/producer/actor Jon Favreau and LA Food Truck godfather Roy Choi spend two episodes with Aaron Franklin at Franklin Barbecue, first learning about his approach to brisket (S1E7) before participating in Franklin’s inaugural Hot Luck Festival in 2017 (S1E8). Check out our AV Club recap here and here)
This barbecue and live-fire cooking edition of the Chef’s Table series profiles 4 pitmasters or live-fire cooking chefs, with the Tootsie Tomanetz of Snow’s Barbecue and Rodney Scott episodes being the highlight for American barbecue fans.
In this first episode of the miniseries on food, food author Michael Pollan goes in search of primordial cooking and finds it in eastern North Carolina and Ed Mitchell. The episode follows Ed and his son Ryan as they pick out a pig from the butcher shop, get the coals started, and then proceed to smoke a whole hog for a small gathering at the end of the episode. Michael and a couple of buddies even try to emulate it on their own in a small, backyard pit in California. Ed also tells a story of how he learned to cook pigs from his grandfather, a former slave. The barbecue section starts at approximately 26:00.
This episode of Queer Eye helped make the Jones Bar-B-Q sisters – Little and Shorty – international barbecue celebrities when it aired earlier in 2019, but they have been doing barbecue in Kansas City for decades. Their sauce with the redesigned label courtesy of the Queer Eye crew is now a huge seller, with the website prominently displaying a banner reading “Please allow a 7-10 day delay in shipping as we have been overwhelmed at the response and will send your order as soon as we can.” From the looks of the episode, it appears that the newly found fame is well-deserved.
In the Philippines lechon, or whole roasted pig, is the preferred form of barbecue in this nation of over 7,000 islands. In this food custom, a smaller suckling pig is tied around a pole and rotated over a live fire for hours. This episode covers lechon in addition to a few other food customs from the city of Cebu in southern Philippines.
The Taco Chronicles is a Spanish-language food series where each episode focuses on a different type of taco. The “Barbacoa” episode focuses on the lamb/goat form of barbecue primarily located in Mexico and the southern border of Texas, which I’ve never tasted myself but is described on the episode as being “softer than the tortilla it is served on.”
In episode 5 of season one of Chef David Chang’s Netflix series, he covered barbecue as well as other live fire customs across the world. Check out our AV club recap here.


Across two four-episode seasons of the travel show co-produced by the Texas Beef Council, host and native Texan Kelsey Pribilski criss-crosses Texas to meet with some of the best pitmasters in the state. She’s in search of the state’s best barbecue as well as secret barbecue menu items. The first season gets the large cities (Austin, Houston, San Antonio, Dallas-Fort Worth) out of the way, while season two is able to tackle more remote locales. Texas Monthly Barbecue Editor Daniel Vaughn even makes an appearance as Kelsey’s guide for the Big Bend episode (S2E1).
Official Description: “Rashad Jones embarks on a road trip to meet people who share his
passion for barbecue.”



“Bama-Q” follows members of the Alabama Barbecue Association through competitions (similar to the first season of “BBQ Pitmasters”)
Official Description: “Food for the belly, and food for the soul. A delightful, tasty and charming look at a small town, rural Florida, African American “Church built on BBQ”
Host Maeve O’Meara dedicated an entire 10-episode season to exploring live-fire cooking traditions across the world
Grilling authority Steven Raichlen provides step-by-step instructions on a variety of barbecue dishes from across the world.
Official Description: “Renowed woodworker, Marc Spagnuolo uses his knowledge of wood to help him explore the world of barbecue and grilling. Spoiler, that knowledge doesn’t help at all”
A rather superficial look into the world of barbecue from the ever-quirky Goldblum.